One daring journey, two young rappers, one music video.

The rap duo Pacman and Peso just released a music video, which involves the two rapping their new song in one of the most repressive regimes in the entire world, North Korea.

“It was different, but it wasn’t scary or what I thought it would be. I expected to not be accepted,” Pacman, or Anthoney Bobb, tells The Washington Post about his trip to the DPRK (The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea). Unsurprisingly, locals wanted to shake their hand and take pictures, according to Bobb, since seeing a different race is a rarity for many members of the DPRK.

Their song, entitled “Escape to North Korea” definitely delves into some irony, whether intentional or not. Just ask Shin Dong Hyuk, a former political prisoner to the regime who was held captive in a concentration camp that’s believed to be no better than that of Hitler in World War II. “Escape from Camp 14” is a book written by Blaine Harden which chronicles Hyuk’s journey from the DPRK to freedom.

As lighthearted and interesting as this video is, with clips of public transportation, students as young as five or six smiling and waving in their classroom, barren wintry fields, and bicycling commuters, it certainly doesn’t account for the real North Korea, of malnutrition and repression from any life away from the the 38th parallel.